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Language no longer a barrier for 'La Boheme' tenor

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  • Language no longer a barrier for 'La Boheme' tenor

    Tulsa World, OK

    Language no longer a barrier for 'La Boheme' tenor

    SHERRY BROWN / Tulsa World

    Yeghishe Manucharyan (right) performs during rehearsal of Tulsa
    Opera's production of "La Boheme." -Photo

    By JAMES D. WATTS JR. World Scene Writer
    10/5/2008
    Last Modified: 10/5/2008 3:51 AM


    It took tenor Yeghishe Manucharyan a few years to learn what he was
    supposed to do when he appeared in his first American production of
    "La Boheme."

    The Armenian-born singer, who is singing as Rodolfo in Tulsa Opera's
    production of Puccini's beloved opera, came to the U.S. in 1999 to
    study at Boston University.

    "Of course, at that time, my English was zero ' less than zero," he
    said, smiling. "The director would try to explain to me what he wanted
    me to do, but all I could understand was when he wanted me to walk to
    the left or the right, because he would point.

    "I knew he wanted me to copy the actions of the tenor in the show's
    second cast, but for me it was impossible because I couldn't
    understand," Manucharyan said. "I knew the role, so I did what I knew
    to do for the role. And it worked, although it was very different from
    what the director wanted."

    Several years later, Manucharyan was preparing for a role with New
    York City Opera, and the same director from that Boston University
    production was there.

    "So I finally got to ask him, 'What did you really want me to do back
    in 1999?' " he said, laughing.

    Manucharyan's English has greatly improved, and his career in opera
    has flourished as well. He has sung leading roles for the Opera
    Orchestra of New York, Toledo Opera, Minnesota Opera and San Diego
    Opera.

    He's also joined the ranks of the Metropolitan Opera, serving as a
    cover singer in a November production of Gluck's "Iphigenie en
    Tauride."

    "That first day was incredible," he said. "You walk through the halls
    and see all these famous people. And having (Placido) Domingo in the
    cast was so great. Being able to watch him, to see all the little
    details he brings to a performance, it made you realize why he is the
    master."

    Manucharyan is like a great many people when he calls "La Boheme" his
    favorite opera. Puccini's tale of young artists in Paris, their
    struggles to survive the poverty in which they live and the emotional
    turmoil of love, has been one of the most beloved works of lyric
    theater since it was first performed in 1896.

    "But it is rough for the tenor," he said. "You're on stage for most of
    the four acts, and the role sits very high in the voice."

    Manucharyan always expected to have a career in music.

    "I have sung all my life, but it was mostly Armenian folk or pop
    music," he said. "I enjoyed it, but I thought if I was going to be a
    serious musician, I would need to learn an instrument. So I began to
    study French horn."

    Manucharyan did well enough with this often intractable instrument to
    earn principal positions with orchestras in his native country. Then,
    one day his singing was overheard by some opera singers.

    "And they began asking me, why wasn't I singing opera?" he said. "So I
    decided to enter this contest, where I would have to sing one opera
    aria and some Armenian songs."

    Manucharyan won the contest, "and so I became an opera singer," he
    said.

    "Armenia is a small country, and so when I performed there, I would
    look down in the pit and see everyone I had been playing with, as a
    member of the orchestra.

    "I miss playing the French horn, because it is a beautiful
    instrument," he said. "But what you have to do to play it isn't good
    for singing."


    `LA BOHEME' BY TULSA OPERA


    When: 7:30 p.m. Friday, 2:30 p.m. Oct. 12

    Where: Tulsa PAC, 101 E. Third St.

    Tickets: $20-$95, available by calling 596-7111, or online at
    tulsaworld.com/mytix
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